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THE CAMP CATAWBA FUND
Camp
Catawba was an exceptional summer camp for boys that operated from 1944
to 1970 near Blowing Rock, N.C. Bounded by the Blue Ridge Parkway on one
side and the Moses H. Cone Memorial Park on the other, the Parkway now
owns the grounds of the camp, along with its near century-old chestnut
lodge. Through an anonymous donor, the Blue Ridge Parkway Foundation has
established the Camp Catawba Fund in order to assist the Parkway in interpreting
the camp to the public.
Most of Camp
Catawba 's campers came from northern cities. They were suddenly surrounded
by towering pines and groves of rhododendron. Their outdoor activities
were typical of American camps, if in a special location. They played
ball games on a sloping field, swam in a spring-fed pond, took riding
lessons at the Blowing Rock Horse Show grounds, and went on hikes in the
Cone Estate and on Grandfather Mountain .
It was the
camp's cultural program, however, that made Catawba an astonishing institution.
The camp's director was Vera Lachmann (1904-1985), a professor of classics
who had fled Germany in the late 1930s and found a refuge and haven in
the Blue Ridge Mountains . She told the campers The Iliad one summer,
The Odyssey the next. She directed the boys in plays by the ancient Greeks
and Shakespeare. She led nondenominational services on Sunday mornings.
The camp's music director, the composer Tui St. George Tucker (1924-2004),
conducted the choir in music ranging from Gregorian chant to Bach and
Negro spirituals. Several of Catawba's arts counselors became known internationally
in painting and sculpture.
The Blue
Ridge Parkway acquired the grounds of Camp Catawba primarily to fend off
private development on land wedged
between properties it already administered. But it finds itself in possession
of an important cultural resource. Through the Camp Catawba Fund, the
Blue Ridge Parkway Foundation looks forward to assisting the Blue Ridge
Parkway tell the story of one of America 's most remarkable summer camps.
The Camp
Catawba Fund was established by an anonymous gift of $5,000 in 2005.
For more information about this fund, call the Blue Ridge Parkway Foundation
--- 336-721-0260.
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